What is it about?
This investigation is the first of its kind in this reservoir for more than three decades, it aimed at evaluating the diversity, abundance, and spatiotemporal variations of rotifers in the Samarra dam during 2023. Three distinct sampling stations were selected to ensure a comprehensive coverage of the dam. The first station was located just below the river's entrance to the dam. The second station was situated near the Samarra Barrage, while the third was positioned close to the Tharthar Regulator. Fifty-seven taxa from fourteen families of rotifers were identified, classified into three orders: Ploima, Flosculariaceae, and Bdelloida, under the Eurotatoria class. Most abundant taxa were Synchaeta oblonga Ehrenberg,1832, Rotaria neptunia (Ehrenberg, 1830); Euchlanis dilatata Ehrenberg, 1832, Polyarthra dolichoptera Idelson,1925, Brachionus calyciflorus Pallas, 1766 (long and short spine), B. urceolaris Müller, 1773, and Keratella cochlearis (Gosse, 1851). Minimum and maximum densities were in winter and spring, respectively. Mean values for richness, evenness and diversity indices were 5.18, 4.75 and 6.37; 0.8, 1.8 and 0.8; and 2.2, 1.8, and 2.4 bits/ind. At stations 1, 2 and 3, respectively. Seasonally, the highest and lowest values of evenness and diversity indices were in summer and winter, respectively, while the richness index was observed in autumn and spring seasons. Also, the highest similarity index value was 68.78% between the first and third stations. Whereas the largest difference in species composition observed between the second and third stations reached 7.76%.
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Photo by saidani moussaab on Unsplash
Why is it important?
The study showed that rotifer density varied seasonally and spatially due to changes in environmental conditions, which were considered the most significant factors affecting Rotifera density. Also, the average values of ecological indices, such as diversity, evenness, and richness, varied by season and site.
Perspectives
For a long time, there have been no zooplankton studies conducted in this section of the river. As a result, this research is the first of its kind in this reservoir in over thirty years, aiming to assess the diversity of rotifers in the water of Samarra Dam.
Dr Osama S. Majeed
Ministry of Education, Baghdad, Iraq
Read the Original
This page is a summary of: DIVERSITY AND SPATIOTEMPORAL VARIATIONS OF ROTIFERA OF THE SAMARRA DAM, IRAQ, Bulletin of The Iraq Natural History Museum, December 2025, Iraq Natural History Research Center and Museum,
DOI: 10.26842/binhm.7.2025.18.4.0875.
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